Except from upcoming @elitefts article I wrote called The 6 Rules Of Training For A Washed Up Meathead. To be published later this month. (unedited)⁣ ⁣ Rule #1 - Take Time Extended Time Off ⁣ ⁣ Up until a few years ago, the most time off training I can remember was no more than a week or two. It wasn't part of my belief system, and when I did take off two weeks, the joint pain got worse. In a way, it is like a race car slamming on the brakes. It's better to slow down than take time off, but after I would back it down, I didn't want or feel I needed the time off. ⁣ ⁣ Due to medical conditions spread over the past few years, I found I was not able to train for weeks on end. A few times a couple months at a time. ⁣ ⁣ This what I found; the first few weeks, the joint pain was much worse, and then it got better. Never to the point of being pain-free but better than most of the year. When I returned to training, I was weaker and not in shape, no doubt about that. Each time I came back stronger than the time before. At the time of writing this, I have not trained in seven weeks and do not intend to train for another 4–5 weeks. I go to the gym and help others, but that's it. I set a goal that I wanted to achieve by the end of the year and did it in the third week of October. I said after I did it that I would not train again until next year, and meant what I said. Do I feel out of shape? Yep. Do I know I am weaker? Yep. Do I care about it? Nope. ⁣ ⁣ It took me a long time to get to this point, but I know for me this is the best way to go about my training. When I resume training, I will have two to three months of merely getting back in shape – or to a point I can begin to train for something that I will have to strive and work hard to do. I know in my mind what I want to do next, and it will take 9–12 months of training to do it, assuming all goes well. When that objective is achieved, I will take off another couple of months, and so on.⁣ ⁣ I know I’ll be better and stronger for it.

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As you will read in the complete articles these rules DO NOT APPLY TO EVERYONE. If you have a couple decades of competing under your belt and the dues you needed to pay have come due... these are for you. It took almost ten years after I was done competing for my real dues to come due. I was so happy I got out with a couple surgeries and a trashed shoulder. NO lower-body issues outside of slight pulls here and there. I mean, zero. 9 years after I did my last meet my hip needed replaced. A few years later - the other one. I have found ways were I do not let my pain control me. This is what the article will be about. I would not suggest this for an active lifter unless they were very seriously injured.    
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Dave Tate

EliteFTS Table Talk— Where strength meets truth. Hosted byDave Tate, Table Talk cuts through the noise to bring raw, unfiltered conversations about training, coaching, business, and life under the bar. No fluff. No hype. Just decades of experience — shared to make you stronger in and out of the gym.

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